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10-15-2007, 03:16 AM
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#2
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Wiki Head Admin
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Originally Posted by Hessah
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funny, on firefox at home.. triumph's cat dance REALLY quickly.. anyway
i just had a thought... banning IP in china just means ppl in china cant log into fiesta right...? the site and all still exist...
all they hv to do is hirer a few geeks in india (one of the other cheap labour nation? that's where we get all our telesales call from) and get them to log in from there... presto! bots on the go again... they can try ban the entire india too.. and ban half the world wherever the bots come from...
just doesnt work....
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Firefox makes him dance quickly for some reason.
Like I said, it's far, far away from a flawless solution.
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10-15-2007, 03:24 AM
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#3
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Hardcore Procrastinator
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Originally Posted by Triumph
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Firefox makes him dance quickly for some reason.
Like I said, it's far, far away from a flawless solution.
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then why are u suggesting an country IP ban if its far far away from flawless solution?!
do u hear urself contradicting?
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10-15-2007, 03:34 AM
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#6
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Wiki Head Admin
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Originally Posted by Hessah
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the thing with those terms and conditions that you agreed to are bounded to those jurisdiction only, usually.
Say, Outspark is based in US (i'm not too sure just assuming XD) and i'm here in Australia.. the terms and condition from a US company may not have any affect on us Aussies. It's extremely hard to sue across country... (which goes in line with wat Mages said...)
unless these sites are hosted and serviced in the same country as the game... its a tough caught case... and probably a really really expensive one too...
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In GunZ, MAIET Entertainment threatened to sue individuals who owned private servers in both the United States and Europe.
They were based in Korea. The lawsuits are generally expensive, but the threats provide the same results, at a marginally lower cost.
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10-15-2007, 03:36 AM
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#7
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Honeying
In-Game Name: RyojiSama
Current Level: 2x
Server: Teva
Posts: 76
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It's not too hard to sue across country, no matter what by agreeing to the ToS you agreed to everything that is written there regardless of where you live.
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<Siggy>
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10-15-2007, 04:02 AM
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#8
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Honeying
In-Game Name: RyojiSama
Current Level: 2x
Server: Teva
Posts: 76
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Well if the book that was printed had a bunch of lies in it than you can sue without a problem.
But I'm pretty sure internet laws work a little diferently than normal ones.
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<Siggy>
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10-15-2007, 03:17 AM
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#9
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Honeying
In-Game Name: RyojiSama
Current Level: 2x
Server: Teva
Posts: 76
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It's illegal to do that though. Not that they really do anything about it seeing as there are thousands if not millions of people doing it each day.
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<Siggy>
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10-15-2007, 03:23 AM
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#10
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Wiki Head Admin
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There are approximately 100,000 Chinese players, as of 2005, employed in the gold market business. Yes, employed. Monthly salaries range from $120-250 a month, or roughly 1750 RMB a month. That's a pittance, but some people are desperate.
By default, gold farming and selling is in direct violation of the EULA we all agreed to when registering, but the effort that is required to track down each violator is so great that no sane person is willing to do it.
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